BIBLIOGRAPHY
1. OLD ROMAN TRAGEDY.
- Ribbeck, Die Römische Tragödie.
- Wordsworth, Fragments and Specimens of Early Latin, pp. 567 and following.
- Simcox, History of Latin Literature, Vol. I, pp. 31-44.
- Sellar, Roman Poets of the Republic, pp. 47-150.
- Tyrrell, Latin Poetry, pp. 32-42.
- Conington, Miscellaneous Writings, Vol. I, pp. 294-347.
- Moulton, The Ancient Classical Drama, pp. 203-222.
2. LATER ROMAN TRAGEDY AND SENECA.
- Teuffel, History of Roman Literature (translated by Warr), Vol. II, pp. 48-52.
- Newton (and others), Seneca, his Tenne Tragedies Translated into Englysh (Spenser Society reprint, 1887).
- Conington, Miscellaneous Writings, Vol. I, pp. 385-411.
- Cunliffe, The Influence of Seneca on Elizabethan Tragedy.
- Patin, Études sur les Tragiques Grecs; Euripides. The work has many valuable comparisons between Euripides and Seneca.
- Tyrrell, Latin Poetry, pp. 269-272.
- Simcox, History of Latin Literature, Vol. II, pp. 24-28.
- Ward, History of English Dramatic Literature, Vol. I, pp. 189 and following.
- Merivale, History of Rome Under the Empire, Vol. VI, pp. 382 and following.
- Mommsen, History of Rome, Vol. II, pp. 527-538.
3. ROMAN COMEDY.
- Mommsen, History of Rome, Vol. II, pp. 503-526.
- Simcox, History of Latin Literature, Vol. I, pp. 45-61.
- Sellar, Roman Poets of the Republic, pp. 153-220.
- Tyrrell, Latin Poetry, pp. 43-58.
- Moulton, The Ancient Classical Drama, pp. 377-423.